May 31, 2018 — The Gulf of Mexico off Texas’ upper and middle coast is likely to be a bit bumpy now through the weekend as a moderate, 10- to 15-knot south wind is predicted to kick up 2- to 4-foot seas in offshore waters. Add a little wind-chop and tight wave intervals to the mix, and the open Gulf could be irritatingly, if not nauseatingly, uncomfortable for recreational anglers bouncing, rolling and pitching in the Gulf in 20- to 26-foot fishing boats.
But that’s not likely to blunt the number of Texas-based anglers heading offshore beginning Friday. They have reason to be encouraged and excited. Friday marks the opening of what promises to be the longest red snapper fishing season in more than a decade for Texas recreational anglers fishing from private boats in waters beyond the state’s jurisdictional boundary.
After two decades of seeing recreational fishing season for red snapper in Gulf water under federal jurisdiction (beyond 9 nautical miles) steadily shrink from year-round until 1997 to as few as 11 days in 2016, Texas anglers fishing in federal waters will this year be able to catch and retain the Gulf’s most popular reef fish for what state fisheries managers project will be an 82-day season.
That 82-day season, tentatively set to end Aug. 21, is almost double 2017’s 42-day federal-water season for private-boat anglers, nearly eight times 2016’s 11-day season and the longest since a 194-day season in 2007. The federal-water recreational snapper limit will remain two snapper per day with a 16-inch minimum length requirement.
Read the full story at the Houston Chronicle